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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Creditors of Hamilton, Younger of Orbiston, v Hamilton of Dalziel, and the Creditors of Orbiston, Elder. [1714] 5 Brn 113 (12 November 1714) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1714/Brn050113-0119.html Cite as: [1714] 5 Brn 113 |
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[1714] 5 Brn 113
Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by ALEXANDER BRUCE, ADVOCATE.
Date: The Creditors of Hamilton, Younger of Orbiston,
v.
Hamilton of Dalziel, and the Creditors of Orbiston, Elder
12 November 1714 Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
A disposition being granted in anno 1699, by William Hamilton of Orbiston, in favours of James Hamilton his son, of his whole lands : he also grants to him an assignation of the same date, to his whole debts and sums of money, or other rights, which was or could be interpreted in his favours ; but reserving a faculty to burden the assignation with such conditions as the father should think fit. At granting these rights, Orbiston stood bound as cautioner for the Lord Glasfoord and his lady, for a considerable sum, to my Lady Semple, for which he had a bond of relief; and upon distress having paid the money, his son's creditors, after his decease, obtained themselves decerned executors dative to him, and upon a license raised a process against the Lord Semple; as also upon a cognitionis causa, adjudged from Orbiston, elder, this debt of the Lord Semple. When Orbiston paid the debt, he took an assignation in his own name, and thereupon adjudged the Lord Semple's estate, and his own creditors also adjudged from him. Whereby, in the ranking of the creditors of the father and son, a competition arose for the foresaid subject of relief.
The point in question being, whether the general disposition of all debts by Orbiston to his son, did comprehend the said bond of relief; it was contended for old Orbiston's creditors, that it did not. 1mo. Because the said assignation being general, could not be interpreted to include such singular obligements as clauses
of relief, which by their nature are scarce assignable, at least not to be presumed conveyed under a generality; especially since old Orbiston took thereafter assignation in his own name, and granted a special assignation thereof to Dalziel. 2do. Though the assignation should be found to carry the right of relief, yet it is to be understood cum suo onere; so that young Orbiston behoved to free and relieve his father of the debt, which he did not. 3tio. The assignation being latent, and special, as to the subject assigned, and not intimated to the debtor, and old Orbiston having thereafter adjudged, and this adjucation adjudged from him by his creditors, and therefore legally intimated; they are preferable both to the son and his creditors. 4to. The son's creditors cannot compete; because the assignation reserves a faculty to burden the assignation with such conditions as the father should think fit; which faculty he thereafter exerced in a posterior contract betwixt him and his son, with an express irritancy, de non contrahendo debitum; and this contract having intervened before contracting any of the son's debts, they were thereby excluded from any interest in the subject. Answered for the creditors of young Orbiston,—That the two above-mentiontioned rights, comprehending the whole estate, must comprehend this bond of relief ; because nothing is excepted, especially since they are granted with the burden of debts; and seeing the son was subjected to the payment of this debt to the Lord Semple, the obligation of relief was undoubtedly conveyed with the rest of the estate. 2do. Nothing hinders a bond of relief, even before distress, to be assigned; since every obligation may, and even such as are conditional, as an obligation of relief is. So that the cautioner being distressed, his assignee has the same action the cedent would have had; as was found in the case of the Marquis of Tweeddale contra Earl of Lauderdale. 3tio. As to Orbiston's taking assignation to the debt in his own name, that was proper enough to shew the distress was incurred; and the right did accresce to young Orbiston, like all other supervening rights taken by the cedent, which doubtless accresce to the assignee. 4to. As to old Orbiston's paying the debt himself, and not the son, that had only the effect to purify the bond of relief, and make it take place in the son's person. Nay, it is plain it was the son's means that paid it, the father being denuded, and so wanting means of his own; which also answers what was alleged of the son's being bound to relieve the father of the debt, since that was virtually an obligement of relief, that he undertook the payment of the whole debts. 5to. As to old Orbiston's creditors, their denuding him by their adjudication; It was answered, that he was already denuded by the general assignation to his son, to which the adjudication led by the father did accresce, like an assignee carrying on diligence in his cedent's name. Besides that young Orbiston's right was first legally perfected, by his creditor's pursuing the Lord Semple upon a licence; which was equivalent to an intimation, which also takes off all pretence of latency. 6to. To the last point, anent the innovating contract, it was answered, that the son never receded from the first settlement; nor was that contract an innovation, but a farther title given to the son. And it was jus tertii to old Orbiston's creditors, since it does not state them in a better case; there being nothing therein given to old Orbiston, but only some restrictions laid upon the son, such as not to contract debt, which could signify nothing to old Orbiston's creditors : for though the son's after debts could not affect the land, yet that would not extend to separate funds, such as this
right of relief; neither took that contract any effect, not being registrate in the record of tailyies : so that the son's creditors were in optima fide to contract. The Lords found it relevant to prefer the son's creditors, that the debt was paid out of the son's estate and effects.
Boswel, for the father's creditors.
Alt, Sir Walter Pringle. Durie, Clerk. Vol. I. page 4.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting